Two bright Stars/Planets

Stellarium is very good.


<a class="postlink" href="http://www.stellarium.org/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://www.stellarium.org/</a>
 
Amazing little app from the appstore. You simply point your phone in any direction and the app will tell you what your looking at. It's also linked up to Telescopes around the world and you can link up "live" to them. Not sure how that bit works yet......think you input an ip address, still tis good fun

9lkfno.jpg
 
Mr Blue Stuff said:
Where's the space station in relation to Jupiter n Venus? Also I've just read a bit more of this thread.....is that Mars in the opposite direction to the J & V?

the space station is in the south east pretty well opposite to venus & jupiter. it often has a reddish tinge so i think you've found it. mars is in the south but although relatively close at the moment isn't very elevated in the sky.

here's a very good link to information on the night sky this month.

<a class="postlink" href="http://www.jodrellbank.manchester.ac.uk/astronomy/nightsky/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://www.jodrellbank.manchester.ac.uk ... /nightsky/</a>
 
blumoon said:
Amazing little app from the appstore. You simply point your phone in any direction and the app will tell you what your looking at. It's also linked up to Telescopes around the world and you can link up "live" to them. Not sure how that bit works yet......think you input an ip address, still tis good fun

9lkfno.jpg

That is pretty good.
 
mcfc2607 said:
IM NOT REALLY HERE said:
mcfc2607 said:
if a star was 20 light years away and it exploded today
would we see the explosion 20 years later?

Yep.


so a star you can see in the sky today could have exploded in real time but the light has not traveled to earth yet

Yes thats right, It can be a bit weird to get you head round sometimes.
 
laserblue said:
Mr Blue Stuff said:
Where's the space station in relation to Jupiter n Venus? Also I've just read a bit more of this thread.....is that Mars in the opposite direction to the J & V?

the space station is in the south east pretty well opposite to venus & jupiter. it often has a reddish tinge so i think you've found it. mars is in the south but although relatively close at the moment isn't very elevated in the sky.

here's a very good link to information on the night sky this month.

<a class="postlink" href="http://www.jodrellbank.manchester.ac.uk/astronomy/nightsky/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://www.jodrellbank.manchester.ac.uk ... /nightsky/</a>

Added to my faves and ty :)
 
mcfc2607 said:
IM NOT REALLY HERE said:
mcfc2607 said:
if a star was 20 light years away and it exploded today
would we see the explosion 20 years later?

Yep.


so a star you can see in the sky today could have exploded in real time but the light has not traveled to earth yet

a 'new' supernova was spotted in the pinwheel galaxy last august. it's 21 million light years away which means it actually exploded 21 million years ago. the time scale is difficult to get your head around but that was 20 million years before the earliest hominids appeared on earth.

<a class="postlink" href="http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2011/08/26/night-sky-news-new-supernova-blast-brightening-fast/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com ... ning-fast/</a>
 
bar68_s.jpg


This is amazing.

This image shows - in silhouette - the molecular cloud Barnard 68 that lies about 500 light years away in the constellation Ophiuchus. It is ~1 light year across and has a high concentration of dust and gas absorbing virtually all of the light from more distant stars. It is in these dark clouds that new stars form to give open star clusters like the Pleiades.
 
IM NOT REALLY HERE said:
bar68_s.jpg


This is amazing.

This image shows - in silhouette - the molecular cloud Barnard 68 that lies about 500 light years away in the constellation Ophiuchus. It is ~1 light year across and has a high concentration of dust and gas absorbing virtually all of the light from more distant stars. It is in these dark clouds that new stars form to give open star clusters like the Pleiades.
Is that one of dem black hole tings dem?
 
yeseye said:
IM NOT REALLY HERE said:
bar68_s.jpg


This is amazing.

This image shows - in silhouette - the molecular cloud Barnard 68 that lies about 500 light years away in the constellation Ophiuchus. It is ~1 light year across and has a high concentration of dust and gas absorbing virtually all of the light from more distant stars. It is in these dark clouds that new stars form to give open star clusters like the Pleiades.
Is that one of dem black hole tings dem?

I think it's a bit of dirt on the lens - Give it a wipe. (The lens)
 
mcfc2607 said:
IM NOT REALLY HERE said:
mcfc2607 said:
if a star was 20 light years away and it exploded today, would we see the explosion 20 years later?
Yep.
so a star you can see in the sky today could have exploded in real time but the light has not travelled to earth yet
Er, how many light years away from us is the sun? Am a tad worried that it may already have exploded, and we've not yet realised.
 
another generation said:
mcfc2607 said:
IM NOT REALLY HERE said:
so a star you can see in the sky today could have exploded in real time but the light has not travelled to earth yet
Er, how many light years away from us is the sun? Am a tad worried that it may already have exploded, and we've not yet realised.

i think it takes 8 mins for the light to get here





bet i am completely wrong.
 
mcfc2607 said:
another generation said:
mcfc2607 said:
so a star you can see in the sky today could have exploded in real time but the light has not travelled to earth yet
Er, how many light years away from us is the sun? Am a tad worried that it may already have exploded, and we've not yet realised.

i think it takes 8 mins for the light to get here





bet i am completely wrong.

I'd check via the internet but I'm too busy on here. Anyway, we'll probably all be burned up in a sunburst by the time I can get an answer on, so who cares (maaan)?
 
ciderjohn1 said:
nice view tonight with a crescent moon.

There are two types of crescent moon depending on the phase of the cycle.

Tonight's is a waxing crescent.
 

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